A Treatise on Those Special Laws Which Are Contained Under and Have Reference to the Eighth and Ninth, and Tenth Commandments

 I. (1) I have in my previous treatises spoken of the laws relating to adultery and murder, and to all the subordinate offences which come under those

 II. (7) If any one being insanely carried away by a desire for the property of others attempts to steal it, and not being able easily to carry it off

 III. (11) Now other thefts are to be atoned for by a payment of double the value of the thing stolen but if any one steals an ox or a sheep, the law

 IV. (13) A kidnapper also is a thief but he is, moreover, a thief who steals the very most excellent thing that exists upon the earth. Now, in the ca

 V. (20) In the field also, as some one of the old writers has said, lawsuits arise since covetousness and a desire for the possessions of others

 VI. (26) And not only do those men do damage who devour the property of others with their flocks and herds, but so also do those who inconsiderately a

 VII. (30) A deposit is the most sacred of all those things which relate to the associations of men with regard to property, inasmuch as it depends upo

 VIII. (41) This is the ninth of the ten commandments, being the fourth in number of those in the second table but one which is calculated to bestow t

 IX. (55) The law thinks that all those who adhere to the sacred constitution, established by Moses, ought to be free from all unreasonable passions, a

 X. (59) In the first place the law enjoins the judge not to listen to vain Reports.[Ex 23:1.] Why is this? The law says, My good man, let thy ears be

 XI. (62) The second commandment given to a judge is not to receive gifts [Ex 23:8.] for gifts, says the law, blind the eyes that see, and pervert jus

 XII. (70) The third commandment given to a judge is to investigate the transactions themselves, in preference to showing any regard to the parties to

 XIII. (72) And in addition to what has already been said, there is another most admirable precept given which enjoins the judge not to show pity upon

 XIV. (79) Every passion is open to and deserving of blame, inasmuch as every immoderate and violent impulse, and every irrational and unnatural emotio

 XV. (84) So great and so excessive an evil is covetous desire or rather, if I am to speak the plain truth concerning it, it is the source of all evil

 XVI. (95) And the most holy Moses appears to me to have had a regard to all these circumstances, and on that account to have commanded that men should

 XVII. (100) Moreover, Moses has not granted an unlimited possession and use of all other animals to those who partake in his sacred constitution, but

 XVIII. (105) The animals which are clean and lawful to be used as food are ten in number the heifer, the lamb, the goat, the stag, the antelope, the

 XIX. (109) For this reason all animals with solid hoofs, and all with many toes are spoken of by implication as unclean the one because, being so, th

 XX. (110) Having laid down these definitions with respect to land animals, he proceeds to describe what aquatic creatures are clean and lawful to be u

 XXI. (113) And adhering to the same general idea the lawgiver asserts that those reptiles which have no feet, and which crawl onwards, dragging themse

 XXII. (116) Having, therefore, in his ordinances already gone through all the different kinds of land animals and of those who live in the water, and

 XXIII. (119) Moreover, Moses Commands[Le 5:2.] that no man shall take of any dead carcass, or of any body which has been torn by wild beasts partly b

 XXIV. For the essence of the soul of man is the breath of God, especially if we follow the account of Moses, who, in his history of the creation of th

 XXV. (132) This may be sufficient to say, being in fact all that I am able to advance, about the laws which bear on appetite and desire by way of fill

 XXVI. (136) One portion of justice, and that not an unimportant one, relates to courts of justice and to the judge, which indeed I have mentioned befo

 XXVII. (143) The lawgiver also gives this most admirable injunction, that one must not add anything to, or take anything away from the law, but that i

 XXVIII. (149) There is also this commandment ordained which is of great common utility, that, Thou shalt not move thy neighbours' landmarks which the

 XXIX. (151) Some persons have contended that all magistracies ought to have the officers appointed to them by lot which however is a mode of proceedi

 XXX. (157) The all-wise Moses seeing this by the power of his own soul, makes no mention of any authority being assigned by lot, but he has chosen to

 XXXI. (158) And Moses gives also two reasons, on account of which it is not proper for strangers to be elected to situations of authority in the firs

 XXXII. (160) And from the first day on which any one enters upon his office, he orders that he shall write out a copy of the book of the Law[De 17:18.

 XXXIII. (170) And it becomes a man who has been thought worthy of the supreme and greatest authority to appoint successors who may govern with him and

 XXXIV. (176) We have here mentioned one example of what we before alluded to. We must now add an instance of the second kind. I said that the causes o

 XXXV. (183) The law also forbids, by a most just and reasonable prohibition, the man who has undertaken the care and government of the common interest

 XXXVI. (188) Therefore it is right for good rulers of a nation to imitate him in these points, if they have any anxiety to attain to a similitude to G

 XXXVII. (193) Again, merchants and pedlars, and people in the market, and all those who deal in things necessary for life, [Le 19:36.] and who in cons

 XXXVIII. (197) Also this commandment is given with exceeding propriety, [Le 19:14.] which forbids anyone from blaspheming and speaking ill, especially

 XXXIX. (203) After this the lawgiver proceeds to connect with these commandments a somewhat similar harmony or series of injunctions commanding breed

 XL. (208) The commandment which came in the middle of the three injunctions about pairs, was that one was not to sow a vineyard so as to make it bear

 XLI. (219) These, then, are the laws which he appoints to be observed by each individual. But there are other commandments of a more general nature of

 XLII. (230) We have now enumerated the matters which belong to justice but as for justice itself, what poet or orator could celebrate it, in worthy t

IV. (13) A kidnapper also is a thief; but he is, moreover, a thief who steals the very most excellent thing that exists upon the earth. Now, in the case of inanimate things, and of those animals which are of no very great use indeed in life, he has commanded twice the value of them to be paid to their owners by those who steal them, as has been said before. And again, in the case of those tame and very useful flocks and herds of sheep and oxen, he has ordered the payment to be fourfold or fivefold; (14) but man, as it seems, has been assigned the most pre-eminent position among the animals, being, as it were, a near relation of God himself, and akin to him in respect of his participation in reason; which makes him immortal, although he is liable to death. On which account every one who feels any admiration of virtue is full of exceeding anger, and is utterly implacable against kidnappers, who for the sake of most iniquitous gain dare to inflict slavery on those who are free by birth, and who partake of the same nature as themselves. (15) For if masters perform a praiseworthy action when they emancipate servants born in their house or purchased with money, even though they have often not done them any great service, from the slavery in which they are held, because of their own humanity by which they are influenced, how heavy ought to be the accusation which is brought against those who deprive of that most excellent of all possessions, freedom, those who are at present in possession of it; when it is an object for which man, who has been well born and properly brought up, would think it glorious to die? (16) And before now, some men, increasing their own innate wickedness, and directing the natural treachery of their characters to a violation of all rights, have studied to bring slavery not only upon strangers and foreigners, but even upon those of the same nation as themselves; and sometimes, even upon men of the same borough and of the same tribe, disregarding the community of laws and customs, in which they have been bred up with them from their earliest infancy, which nature stamps upon their souls as the firmest bond of good will in the case of all those who are not very intractable and greatly addicted to cruelty; (17) who, for the sake of lawless gain sell slaves to slave-dealers, and enslave them to any chance persons, transporting them to a foreign land, so that they shall never any more salute their native land, not even in a dream, nor taste of any hope of happiness. For these kidnappers would be committing a lighter iniquity if they themselves retained the services of those whom they have enslaved, but as the case stands at present they commit a double wrong, in selling them again, and thus making them two masters instead of one, and raising up two slaveries as enemies to their condition. (18) For they, being aware of the former prosperous condition of those whom they have carried off, might perhaps repent, feeling a tardy and late compassion for those who are thus fallen, having a proper awe of the uncertainty of fortune eluding all conjectures. But those who buy persons in this condition, out of ignorance of their families, will neglect them as if they were sprung from successive generations of slaves, having no inducement in their souls to display that gentleness and humanity towards them which it would be natural for them to preserve in the case of slaves who had become so after having been originally and naturally free-born. (19) And let whatever punishment the court of justice shall sentence them to be inflicted upon those who kidnap and enslave those of another nation; but upon those who kidnap those of their own country and of their own blood, and who sell them for slaves, shall be passed the unalterable sentence of death. For, in fact, one's own countrymen are not far from blood relations, and they must very nearly come under the same definition with them.

CONCERNING DAMAGE